(AUSTIN)— Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar today released totals for fiscal 2016 state revenues, in addition to announcing monthly state revenues for August.

Net revenue available for general purpose spending after severance tax revenues are set aside for transfer to the Economic Stabilization Fund (ESF) and the State Highway Fund (SHF) was $49.9 billion, 1.3 percent below the Certification Revenue Estimate (CRE) projection of $50.6 billion.

Sales tax revenue for the year was $28.2 billion, 3.5 percent below the CRE projection of $29.3 billion.

Franchise tax revenue was $3.9 billion. While this source of revenue was down 16.6 percent compared to fiscal 2015 as a result of tax rate reduction, it finished 10 percent ahead of the CRE estimate of $3.5 billion.

“Given the prolonged weakness in the oil and gas sector and the continued downward trend of sales taxes when compared year over year, we expected total tax collections to come in below estimates,” Hegar said. “However, the current budget continues to work. Unlike other energy states, Texas doesn’t need to make cuts to the current budget and will end the fiscal year with a substantial balance.”

The state will set aside $879 million for transfer to the ESF and the SHF based on fiscal 2016 oil production tax collections. Natural gas production tax collections did not meet the threshold for transfer. Each fund will receive $439.5 million. The transfer will bring the ESF to $10.1 billion, a record high.

The transfer amounts are based on whether oil production and natural gas production tax revenues exceed 1987 collections. If either tax is greater than the 1987 threshold, an amount equal to 75 percent of the excess is transferred.

“We finished fiscal 2016 with $651 million less for general purpose spending than we estimated in the CRE,” Hegar said. “While that’s a significant number, it’s only 1.3 percent below estimate. Texas continues to grow, only at a more moderated pace.”

Hegar also said today that state sales tax revenue in August was $2.5 billion, down 2.6 percent compared to August 2015.

“The decline in state sales tax revenue was led by reduced collections from the oil and natural gas-related sectors, but collections from the retail trade and information sectors also were down compared to a year ago,” Hegar said. “Increases continued to be seen from construction and restaurants.”

Total sales tax revenue for the three months ending in August 2016 is down 1.7 percent compared to the same period a year ago. Sales tax revenue is the largest source of state funding for the state budget, accounting for 58 percent of all tax collections in fiscal 2016. Motor vehicle sales and rental taxes, motor fuel taxes and oil and natural gas production taxes also are large revenue sources for the state.

In August 2016, Texas collected the following revenue from those taxes: